Emptiness.
There was a time in my life when I had no understanding of Buddhism. I was the outcast in school who didn't attend church very often. When I did attend church it was on personal and business matters. The townspeople talked about how they met god and let Jesus into their hearts. I travelled all around town with my own two feet. Getting lost in nature, going to see my friends, and going for bike rides. Sometimes I'd be so fargone while outdoors I started visualizing 'emptiness'. The path I was on was different, yet the same. I visualized it like this 'force feild' of energy covering the entire world. Another way I imagined it was floating inside the deep end of a swimming pool legs crossed in meditation. Now when I look outdoors I can see the sublime. My mind is calm like a clear river. I relized that their is no physical limitations in the universe. Even when I'm looking up in the sky there is no limit to how high that sky is. The universe is infinite. More sublime is the fact I'm breathing 'air' from the environment we all share to sustain life and procreate. The universe is like this very dense blanket that covers our 'selfs'. In this mindset I don't see 'people', I see 'sentient beings'. In this mindset (if you want to call it that) I can feel warmth inside my heart region which I refer to as 'the beakon'. Today, I found a clip from a martial arts flick called 'Bullet Proof Monk'. In the end the monk talks about how gravity doesn't exist if you believe it doesn't. This is a outrageous belief. I know gravity keeps my centre of balance which is an essential fundamental for all martial arts. Is it ironic the first blissful absorbation I experienced was when I felt there was no gravity? It's called 'innate awareness'. When he talks about 'air' being everywhere, that reminds me about how I discovered 'emptiness' before Buddhism. Now that I taught vipassana to some of my friends I'm hearing complaints about emptiness. They say that it can't be fully put into words. Here is a clip I wanted to share:
There was a time in my life when I had no understanding of Buddhism. I was the outcast in school who didn't attend church very often. When I did attend church it was on personal and business matters. The townspeople talked about how they met god and let Jesus into their hearts. I travelled all around town with my own two feet. Getting lost in nature, going to see my friends, and going for bike rides. Sometimes I'd be so fargone while outdoors I started visualizing 'emptiness'. The path I was on was different, yet the same. I visualized it like this 'force feild' of energy covering the entire world. Another way I imagined it was floating inside the deep end of a swimming pool legs crossed in meditation. Now when I look outdoors I can see the sublime. My mind is calm like a clear river. I relized that their is no physical limitations in the universe. Even when I'm looking up in the sky there is no limit to how high that sky is. The universe is infinite. More sublime is the fact I'm breathing 'air' from the environment we all share to sustain life and procreate. The universe is like this very dense blanket that covers our 'selfs'. In this mindset I don't see 'people', I see 'sentient beings'. In this mindset (if you want to call it that) I can feel warmth inside my heart region which I refer to as 'the beakon'. Today, I found a clip from a martial arts flick called 'Bullet Proof Monk'. In the end the monk talks about how gravity doesn't exist if you believe it doesn't. This is a outrageous belief. I know gravity keeps my centre of balance which is an essential fundamental for all martial arts. Is it ironic the first blissful absorbation I experienced was when I felt there was no gravity? It's called 'innate awareness'. When he talks about 'air' being everywhere, that reminds me about how I discovered 'emptiness' before Buddhism. Now that I taught vipassana to some of my friends I'm hearing complaints about emptiness. They say that it can't be fully put into words. Here is a clip I wanted to share:
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